Pfizer’s promises fail to allay fears of UK job losses

Pfizer chief executive Ian Read leaves parliament after appearing at a science committee hearing on Wednesday. Photo: Reuters

Pfizer chief executive Ian Read leaves parliament after appearing at a science committee hearing on Wednesday. Photo: Reuters

Published May 16, 2014

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London - Pfizer’s potential takeover of AstraZeneca posed a threat to British science unless the US drug maker could give more concrete, enforceable guarantees on jobs and investment, UK politicians scrutinising the deal said yesterday.

AstraZeneca has rejected a $106 billion (R1.1 trillion) offer from Pfizer and expressed concern that the US firm would shut down important research to save costs should the two merge. But it has also said it would have to consider an offer if the price was right, and Pfizer has said it could up its offer.

Over two days of parliamentary questioning, Pfizer chief executive Ian Read defended his five-year commitment to complete AstraZeneca’s research centre in Cambridge, retain a factory in the north-western town of Macclesfield and place a fifth of its research staff in Britain if the deal went ahead.

But he also said he expected the group’s combined research and development spending to fall, and declined to give further commitments about how many jobs might be lost if the merger went ahead.

Andrew Miller, the chairman of parliament’s science committee, which questioned executives on Wednesday, said he was not satisfied with Pfizer’s promises or convinced of the government’s ability to enforce them.

“The national stake in the proposed transaction with Pfizer is unusually high: any threat to AstraZeneca’s research capacity must, to an extent, be considered a threat to UK science,” Miller said in a letter to Science Minister David Willetts. “Whether or not the government is able to hold Pfizer to these promises – and we are not yet confident it can – further, longer-term guarantees need to be obtained before we can be confident of Pfizer’s commitment to the UK.”

Miller said five-year commitments were of limited value in an industry that “measures progress by decades rather than years”. - Reuters

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